A Reuters examination of corporate filings by some of the biggest
players in the industry, including BP, Shell and France's Total
shows the sensitivity of these companies' earnings to changes in oil
prices has risen in recent years.
This means that for every dollar the oil price drops, their profits
sink more than they might have done five years ago.
Of course, that wasn't the plan. Choices made by several oil majors
that built more exposure to prices into their portfolio, mainly
through the kinds of contracts they opted to sign, was aimed at
enjoying prices that were historically high.
"In simple terms it (oil price sensitivity) has increased and that's
been a deliberate choice," Simon Henry, Chief Financial Officer at
Royal Dutch Shell Plc, Europe’s largest oil group by market value,
told Reuters.
"We took a view that prices were going to go up and that our
portfolio was less exposed than it should be in that environment
because of the types of contracts we had in place," he said.
Shell made the decision in the early 2000s and it took around a
decade for that to have a real impact on the company's bottom line,
Henry said.
In 2009, Shell's then-CEO Peter Voser said a $1 move in the crude
price would shift earnings up or down by around $200 million. In
January, Henry estimated the impact of a dollar move on earnings was
around $330 million and increasing.
Brent crude averaged $54 per barrel in the first quarter of 2015 –
half of what it was in the same period last year. If the current
price holds, the hit to Shell's pre-tax earnings from the increased
sensitivity alone could run to billions of dollars a year compared
to what it would have been if the 2009 linkage between profits and
oil prices had held steady.
Filings from Europe's second and third largest oil groups,
London-based BP and Paris-based Total, show a similar trend.
In early 2013, London-based BP said a $1 change in the oil price
would lead to a $250 million change in annual pre-tax replacement
cost operating profit in its oil and gas production division. In
March, the company said on its website that a $1 movement in Brent
would change earnings by $300 million.
Total said in 2013 that a $1 rise in Brent would lift adjusted net
operating income by $140 million. Earlier this year, it said the
impact would be $170 million.
The increase in sensitivity is despite the fact that production
levels – the main determinant of how much oil prices hit earnings –
have fallen at all three companies.
SLOW TURNAROUND
Many oil companies missed out on much of the benefit of the oil
price surge from 2004 to 2008. Instead governments grabbed most of
the gains, in part due to the contracts the companies had signed
years earlier.
Historically, companies bought exploration licenses and agreed that,
if they struck oil, they would pay governments a royalty – often a
share of output - even if no profit was declared.
During the 1990s, when oil prices were low and profit margins tight,
companies signed an increasing number of Production Sharing
Agreements (PSAs), which offered returns based on the cash they
invested. That meant companies had a better chance of getting their
money back.
But the safety came at a cost.
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"You're protected on the downside, but you lose some of the upside,"
said Neill Morton, oil analyst with Investec.
Morton said the contracts became less popular with investors as oil
prices soared in the mid-2000s.
Shell was one of the first companies to make the shift to projects
with greater oil price sensitivity. It increased investments in OECD
countries, which do not typically offer PSAs, and, where it did sign
PSAs, it sought to link the returns to prices rather than accept a
fixed return on money invested.
Others followed its lead.
"It was a general trend. Companies were keen to capture the upside
from oil prices," said Tom Ellacott, at consultants Wood Mackenzie.
In February 2008, Philippe Boisseau, president for Gas & Power at
Total, told investors that his company was reducing the share of its
production that came from production-sharing contracts that only
offered a fixed return.
In July 2008, BP's then-CFO Byron Grote told investors the group was
accelerating its exploration program and looking for opportunities
"especially in our key tax and royalty areas, that allow us to
capture price upside".
Total declined to comment on its current strategy in respect to oil
price exposure. BP said the company didn't target a specific
exposure but rather managed its portfolio over time to maximize
returns and balanced investments between PSAs and tax and royalty
regimes.
BG Group, which last week agreed a $70 billion takeover by Shell,
said its oil price sensitivity increased simply because the
historically gas-focused company discovered a lot of oil.
The world’s largest oil company by market value, Exxon Mobil has
seen no change in its sensitivity to oil prices in recent years,
while Chevron does not publish figures. Both declined comment.
Ellacott said that while the strategy of gaining more exposure to
oil prices may hurt today, oil projects had a long life and most oil
companies remain optimistic about long term oil prices.
Shell is unapologetic about its decisions. CFO Henry said the
world's growing energy needs would support crude prices in the years
to come.
"We still firmly believe that absence war, pestilence and famine,
demand will continue to grow," Shell’s Henry said.
(Reporting by Tom Bergin; Editing by Sonya Hepinstall)
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